Guide
Roblox music IDs: how the audio catalog actually works
Updated 2026-06-24
Roblox song ID lists go stale fast — Roblox actively removes copyrighted uploads, so a list of raw numeric IDs is often half-dead within weeks. Here is how the system works and where to find IDs that are actually still live.
Why we don't publish a raw ID list
Most copyrighted-music uploads on Roblox get taken down for DMCA reasons sooner or later, which is why so many "working Roblox music codes" lists online are full of dead IDs. Rather than publish numbers that will silently break, we point you to where live IDs actually live.
The official, copyright-safe route
Roblox's Creator Store has a built-in Audio catalog you can search directly in Studio or in-experience admin tools. Monstercat and NCS (NoCopyrightSounds) tracks are officially licensed for use on Roblox, making them the most reliable picks — search the Creator Store audio tab for either label's catalog instead of copy-pasting a numeric ID from a random list.
How to use an ID once you have one
Copy the numeric ID from the asset's Creator Store page URL, then paste it into the experience's Boombox, radio, or sound-import field (the exact field depends on the game — most Roblox games with music features label it "Song ID" or "Audio ID" in settings).
Spotting a dead or fake ID
If a pasted ID plays silence or throws an error, the asset was likely taken down or never existed. Generic-sounding track names with no artist credit, or IDs copied from years-old lists, are the most common dead links.